Posted on 05/24/2008 4:04:40 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
PASADENA, Calif. - After a nearly 10-month journey, a NASA spacecraft will land softly Sunday on the northern polar region of Mars, if all goes as planned.
The Phoenix Mars Lander is set to touch down in a broad, shallow valley in the Martian arctic plains believed to hold a vast supply of underground ice. Phoenix's job during the 90-day mission is to excavate the soil and ice to study whether the site could have supported microbial life.
The stakes are especially high: Fewer than half of the world's attempts to land on the Red Planet have succeeded.
"I'm getting a real case of heebie-jeebies," Joe Guinn, mission manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said on the eve of the landing.
In keeping with tradition, JPL project manager Barry Goldstein plans to hand out bags of peanuts both salted and unsalted to his team members on landing day. Over the years, JPL found that missions with the lucky charms have better success than those without.
"I don't tempt fate," Goldstein said during a tour of mission control.
Phoenix is the first to attempt to land in Mars' high northern latitudes. The lander will rely on its heat shield, parachute and a dozen thrusters to slow itself down from 12,000 mph to 5 mph. The risky descent takes about seven minutes.
NASA has not had a successful powered landing in more than 30 years since the twin Viking landers in 1976. The last time NASA tried was in 1999 when the Mars Polar Lander prematurely cut off its engines and crashed into the south pole. The Polar Lander loss came during a communications blackout.
Phoenix, on the other hand, will be closely watched by a flotilla of Mars orbiters hovering overhead that will relay information to Earth.
The weather looks ideal for landing, said Peter Smith, principal investigator of the University of Arizona, Tucson, which leads the $420 million mission.
A dust cloud swept through the target site several days ago, but it did not linger and should not affect the spacecraft, Smith said.
If successful, Phoenix will join two other spacecraft on the Martian surface the rovers Spirit and Opportunity which landed in 2004 and have been exploring opposite sides of the equatorial plains.
Unlike the twin rovers, Phoenix is designed to stay in one spot and extend its long robotic arm to dig trenches in the permafrost. It has an onboard laboratory to heat the soil and analyze the vapors for traces of organic compounds, an essential ingredient for life.
JoJo Aguilar dusts a full-scale model of the Phoenix lander Thursday, May 22, 2008, at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The lander will reach Mars on Sunday, May 25, to begin a three-month mission studying an arctic site on the Red Planet. (AP Photo/Ric Francis)
earlier thread
Robot digger set to land Sunday at Martian pole (Phoenix Mars lander & “seven minutes of terror”)
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2018263/posts
NASA Phoenix Mars Lander
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/main/index.html
Latest Update on Phoenix Mars Lander
05.24.08 — Get the highlights from the Phoenix News Briefing at JPL on Sat., May 24.
Read more
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/phoenix/news/phoenix-20080524.html
ping
I believe that here in Canada Discovery Channels *Daily Planet* program is going to broadcast the landing live.
Scientist 1: Good thing we all used Metric system calculations for landing the craft this time.
Scientist 2: You used Metric calculations???!
Thnaks!
I hope one of the eyes in the Martian skies can catch some of it..
The Science channel is having a live show tomorrow night 7-9PM eastern.
.....bob
It lands tomorrow?
How exciting!
Thanks for posting.
Ping!
On Daily Planet, 7-9 EDT.
I hope all goes well. I’d like to watch it live; I wonder what time zone Mars is? ;=0>
CHANGE is the progressive mantra now.
We mustn't get in the way of progress. /s
Please add me to your ping list...thanks!
#@*>>??%*, in Martian time. ; )
Well be watching that coverage. Won’t miss it!
I hope all goes well. I remember the lander of a few years ago that smashed into Mars instead of gently landing because of some silly metric-to-English conversion or something like that.
Anyway, I have been a big space exploration fan since I was a boy in the 70’s and always look forward to these missions. I remember the first moon landing thanks to my dad calling me to the set to watch.
Thanks for the ping.
Discovery Science Channel here in America will be showing it in HD.
Here’s hoping....
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